"I’ve also considered to use Kafka to message between Web UI and the pipes,
I think it will fit. Chaining the pipes together as a workflow and
implementing, managing and monitoring these long running user tasks with
locality  as I need them is still causing me headache."

You can look at Apache Samza for the chaining the pipes together and
managing long-running tasks with locality.  The long-running tasks run on
YARN, can keep fault-tolerant local state (using LevelDB or RocksDB), use
Kafka for message passing and state replication/persistence.

On Tue, Dec 2, 2014 at 3:26 AM, Stadin, Benjamin <
benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com> wrote:

> To be precise I want the workflow to be associated to a user, but it
> doesn’t need to be run as part of or depend on a session. I can’t run
> scheduled jobs, because a user can potentially upload hundreds of files
> which trigger a long running batch import / update process but he could
> also make a very small upload / update and immediately wants to continue to
> work on the (temporary) data that he just uploaded. So that same workflow
> duration may vary between some seconds, a minute and hours, completely
> depending on the project's size.
>
> So a user can log off and on again to the web site and the initial upload
> + conversion step may either be still running or finished. He’ll see the
> progress on the web site, and once the initial processing is done he can
> continue with the next step of the import workflow, he can interactively
> change some stuff on that temporary data. After he is done changing stuff,
> he can hit a „continue“ button which triggers again a long or short running
> post-processing pipe. Then the user can make a final review of that now
> post-processed data, and after hitting a „save“ button a final commits pipe
> pushes / merges the until now temporary data to some persistent store.
>
> You’re completely right about that I should simplify as much as possible.
> Finding the right mix seems key. I’ve also considered to use Kafka to
> message between Web UI and the pipes, I think it will fit. Chaining the
> pipes together as a workflow and implementing, managing and monitoring
> these long running user tasks with locality  as I need them is still
> causing me headache.
>
> Btw, the tiling and indexing is not a problem. My propblem is mainly in
> parallelized conversion, polygon creation, cleaning of CAD file data (e.g.
> GRASS, prepair, custom tools). After all parts have been preprocessed and
> gathered in one place, the initial creation of the preview geo file is
> taking a fraction of the time (inserting all data in one transaction,
> taking somewhere between sub-second and < 10 seconds for very large
> projects). It’s currently not a concern.
>
> (searching for a Kafka+Spark example now)
>
> Cheers
> Ben
>
>
> Von: andy petrella <andy.petre...@gmail.com>
> Datum: Dienstag, 2. Dezember 2014 10:00
>
> An: Benjamin Stadin <benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com>, "
> user@spark.apache.org" <user@spark.apache.org>
> Betreff: Re: Is Spark the right tool for me?
>
> The point 4 looks weird to me, I mean if you intent to have such workflow
> to run in a single session (maybe consider sessionless arch)
> Is such process for each user? If it's the case, maybe finding a way to
> do it for all at once would be better (more data but less scheduling).
>
> For the micro updates, considering something like a queue (kestrel? or
> even kafk... whatever, something that works) would be great. So you remove
> the load off the instances, and the updates can be done at its own pace.
> Also, you can reuse it to notify the WMS.
> Isn't there a way to do tiling directly? Also, do you need indexes, I mean
> do you need the full OGIS power, or just some classical operators are
> enough (using BBox only for instance)?
>
> The more you can simplify the better :-D.
>
> These are only my2c, it's hard to think or react appropriately without
> knowing the whole context.
> BTW, to answer your very first question: yes, it looks like Spark will
> help you!
>
> cheers,
> andy
>
>
>
> On Mon Dec 01 2014 at 4:36:44 PM Stadin, Benjamin <
> benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com> wrote:
>
>> Yes, the processing causes the most stress. But this is parallizeable by
>> splitting the input source. My problem is that once the heavy preprocessing
>> is done, I’m in a „micro-update“ mode so to say (user-interactive part of
>> the whole workflow). Then the map is rendered directly from the SQLite file
>> by the map server instance on that machine – this is actually a favorable
>> setup for me for resource consumption and implementation costs (I just need
>> to tell the web ui to refresh after something was written to the db, and
>> the map server will render the updates without me changing / coding
>> anything). So my workflow requires to break out of parallel processing for
>> some time.
>>
>> Do you think for my my generalized workflow and tool chain can be like so?
>>
>>    1. Pre-Process many files in a parallel way. Gather all results,
>>    deploy them on one single machine. => Spark coalesce() + Crunch (for
>>    splitting input files into separate tasks)
>>    2. On the machine where preprocessed results are on, configure a map
>>    server to connect to the local SQLite source. Do user-interactive
>>    micro-updates on that file (web UI gets updated).
>>    3. Post-process the files in parallel. => Spark + Crunch
>>    4. Design all of the above as a workflow, runnable (or assignable) as
>>    part of a user session. => Oozie
>>
>> Do you think this is ok?
>>
>> ~Ben
>>
>>
>> Von: andy petrella <andy.petre...@gmail.com>
>> Datum: Montag, 1. Dezember 2014 15:48
>>
>> An: Benjamin Stadin <benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com>, "
>> user@spark.apache.org" <user@spark.apache.org>
>> Betreff: Re: Is Spark the right tool for me?
>>
>> Indeed. However, I guess the important load and stress is in the
>> processing of the 3D data (DEM or alike) into geometries/shades/whatever.
>> Hence you can use spark (geotrellis can be tricky for 3D, poke @lossyrob
>> for more info) to perform these operations then keep an RDD of only the
>> resulting geometries.
>> Those geometries won't probably that heavy, hence it might be possible to
>> coalesce(1, true) to have to whole thing on one node (or if your driver is
>> more beefy, do a collect/foreach) to create the index.
>> You could also create a GeoJSON of the geometries and create the r-tree
>> on it (not sure about this one).
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon Dec 01 2014 at 3:38:00 PM Stadin, Benjamin <
>> benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Thank you for mentioning GeoTrellis. I haven’t heard of this before. We
>>> have many custom tools and steps, I’ll check our tools fit in. The end
>>> result after is actually a 3D map for native OpenGL based rendering on iOS
>>> / Android [1].
>>>
>>> I’m using GeoPackage which is basically SQLite with R-Tree and a small
>>> library around it (more lightweight than SpatialLite). I want to avoid
>>> accessing the SQLite db from any other machine or task, that’s where I
>>> thought I can use a long running task which is the only process responsible
>>> to update a local-only stored SQLite db file. As you also said SQLite  (or
>>> mostly any other file based db) won’t work well over network. This isn’t
>>> only limited to R-Tree but expected limitation because of file locking
>>> issues as documented also by SQLite.
>>>
>>> I also thought to do the same thing when rendering the (web) maps. In
>>> combination with the db handler which does the actual changes, I thought to
>>> run a map server instance on each node, configure it to add the database
>>> location as map source once the task starts.
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>> Ben
>>>
>>> [1] http://www.deep-map.com
>>>
>>> Von: andy petrella <andy.petre...@gmail.com>
>>> Datum: Montag, 1. Dezember 2014 15:07
>>> An: Benjamin Stadin <benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com>, "
>>> user@spark.apache.org" <user@spark.apache.org>
>>> Betreff: Re: Is Spark the right tool for me?
>>>
>>> Not quite sure which geo processing you're doing are they raster,
>>> vector? More info will be appreciated for me to help you further.
>>>
>>> Meanwhile I can try to give some hints, for instance, did you considered
>>> GeoMesa <http://www.geomesa.org/2014/08/05/spark/>?
>>> Since you need a WMS (or alike), did you considered GeoTrellis
>>> <http://geotrellis.io/> (go to the batch processing)?
>>>
>>> When you say SQLite, you mean that you're using Spatialite? Or your db
>>> is not a geo one, and it's simple SQLite. In case you need an r-tree (or
>>> related) index, you're headaches will come from congestion within your
>>> database transaction... unless you go to a dedicated database like Vertica
>>> (just mentioning)
>>>
>>> kr,
>>> andy
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon Dec 01 2014 at 2:49:44 PM Stadin, Benjamin <
>>> benjamin.sta...@heidelberg-mobil.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>>
>>>> I need some advise whether Spark is the right tool for my zoo. My
>>>> requirements share commonalities with „big data“, workflow coordination and
>>>> „reactive“ event driven data processing (as in for example Haskell Arrows),
>>>> which doesn’t make it any easier to decide on a tool set.
>>>>
>>>> NB: I have asked a similar question on the Storm mailing list, but have
>>>> been deferred to Spark. I previously thought Storm was closer to my needs –
>>>> but maybe neither is.
>>>>
>>>> To explain my needs it’s probably best to give an example scenario:
>>>>
>>>>    - A user uploads small files (typically 1-200 files, file size
>>>>    typically 2-10MB per file)
>>>>    - Files should be converted in parallel and on available nodes. The
>>>>    conversion is actually done via native tools, so there is not so much 
>>>> big
>>>>    data processing required, but dynamic parallelization (so for example to
>>>>    split the conversion step into as many conversion tasks as files are
>>>>    available). The conversion typically takes between several minutes and a
>>>>    few hours.
>>>>    - The converted files gathered and are stored in a single database
>>>>    (containing geometries for rendering)
>>>>    - Once the db is ready, a web map server is (re-)configured and the
>>>>    user can make small updates to the data set via a web UI.
>>>>    - … Some other data processing steps which I leave away for brevity
>>>>    …
>>>>    - There will be initially only a few concurrent users, but the
>>>>    system shall be able to scale if needed
>>>>
>>>> My current thoughts:
>>>>
>>>>    - I should avoid to upload files into the distributed storage
>>>>    during conversion, but probably should rather have each conversion 
>>>> filter
>>>>    download the file it is actually converting from a shared place. Other 
>>>> wise
>>>>    it’s bad for scalability reasons (too many redundant copies of same
>>>>    temporary files if there are many concurrent users and many cluster 
>>>> nodes).
>>>>    - Apache Oozie seems an option to chain together my pipes into a
>>>>    workflow. But is it a good fit with Spark? What options do I have with
>>>>    Spark to chain a workflow from pipes?
>>>>    - Apache Crunch seems to make it easy to dynamically parallelize
>>>>    tasks (Oozie itself can’t do this). But I may not need crunch after all 
>>>> if
>>>>    I have Spark, and it also doesn’t seem to fit to my last problem 
>>>> following.
>>>>    - The part that causes me the most headache is the user interactive
>>>>    db update: I consider to use Kafka as message bus to broker between the 
>>>> web
>>>>    UI and a custom db handler (nb, the db is a SQLite file). But how
>>>>    about update responsiveness, isn’t it that Spark will cause some lags 
>>>> (as
>>>>    opposed to Storm)?
>>>>    - The db handler probably has to be implemented as a long running
>>>>    continuing task, so when a user sends some changes the handler writes 
>>>> these
>>>>    to the db file. However, I want this to be decoupled from the job. So 
>>>> file
>>>>    these updates should be done locally only on the machine that started 
>>>> the
>>>>    job for the whole lifetime of this user interaction. Does Spark allow to
>>>>    create such long running tasks dynamically, so that when another (web) 
>>>> user
>>>>    starts a new task a new long–running task is created and run on the same
>>>>    node, which eventually ends and triggers the next task? Also, is it
>>>>    possible to identify a running task, so that a long running task can be
>>>>    bound to a session (db handler working on local db updates, until task
>>>>    done), and eventually restarted / recreated on failure?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ~Ben
>>>>
>>>

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